How have militias – groups of the right-wing extremist movement consisting of armed paramilitary groups – become a political extension of the times? It didn't just happen in response to concerns over the legality of gun ownership – very little politics involved in that issue. And, it didn't happen because these groups suddenly became invested in protecting their homes and families from criminal intrusions. It was much more calculated with connections to Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas, and the current president of the United States.
The modern militia
movement grew from a core of people in the United States who,
beginning in the late 70's and the 80's felt the country was becoming
too socially permissive, too passive in foreign affairs, and too lax
in matters of national security.
Many of these people felt
that the United States was ripe for invasion by an alliance of
enemies, the Soviet Union being the primary threat. These people felt
that they should build retreats in the rural backcountry of the US,
engage in military training, and prepare to overthrow the invaders
with guerilla war, remaking the US as they wanted after the
inevitable victory. These people were called Survivalists.
The tragedy and coverup at
Ruby Ridge in 1992 ignited the militia movement. Far-right groups
poured in from all over the country to stand against what they saw as
the persecution of an innocent family by a tyrannical federal
government.
The result of the Waco
siege in 1993 further energized militias in the United States. For
right-wing militias and so-called Patriot groups, Waco amounted to
evidence of a tyrannical, illegitimate government prepared to kill
its own people. Right-wing extremists regularly invoke it as a
defining moment, proof of Washington’s treachery. “Waco can
happen at any given time,” Mike Vanderboegh, a prominent figure in
the Patriot movement, told Retro Report. He added ominously: “But
the outcome will be different this time. Of that I can assure you.”
During the Obama years,
militia groups – nearly entirely men, and largely white – whole
focus was on conspiracy-oriented hostility toward the federal
government. They believed the federal government was in league with a
shadowy conspiracy known as the “New World Order,” which had
already taken over the rest of the world. This “order” supposedly
going to strip Americans of their rights and their freedoms,
according to Mark Pitcavage, a researcher on anti-government
extremism with the Anti-Defamation League.
According to the Southern
Poverty Law Center, anti-government militia membership, paralleling
hate groups more broadly, ballooned during the Obama years, swelling
from 42 monitored groups
in 2008 to over 300 by 2011.
Then, Donald Trump was
elected, a man who shared the militias distaste for the deep state
who had campaigned to demolish Washington from the inside. “You
have all this confusion” after the election, said J.J. MacNab, who
covers anti-government extremism with Forbes. “And confusion is
actually bad, because these are movements that move forward based on
who they hate. And if you can’t decide who you hate, if you’re
actually going out there because you like something rather than hate
something, that tears the movement apart.”
Pitcavage explains …
“As the militias cast
about for another common foe to rally around, a handful of options
presented themselves. Pivoting off of Trump’s campaign, certain
militia-members eyed nonwhite immigrants, trawling the U.S.-Mexico
border for illegal migrants.
“Others began
building links with some of the foremost anti-Muslim groups across
the country.
“Others yet held out
hope for a resurgence of Black Lives Matter; militia members are
'extremely susceptible to becoming racially inflamed, and they tend
to have an outsized and extraordinarily hostile reaction to what they
would perceive as aggressiveness on the part of African-Americans.'”
(Mark
Pitcavage quoted by Casey Michel. “How Militias Became
the
Private Police for White Supremacists.” Politico.
August 17, 2017.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/08/17/white-supremacists-militias-private-police-215498
)
Trump's presidency changed
the target of militias' rage. They can no longer focused so much on
Obama or candidate Clinton. Now it became blacks, Mexicans, and
Muslims. (2018 figures list 612 anti-government groups nationally,
including 216 active militias. The Southern Poverty Law Center says
there were 36 anti-government groups in Ohio, including 13 militias.)
Trump even warned
evangelical leaders in 2018 that a bad showing in the midterms could
lead to violence. In response, the Oath Keepers announced what it
called its “Spartan Training Group Program,” intended to quell
the anti-Trump resistance with intimidation and, should things come
to it, bullets. Among the skills the group is looking for in training
camps attendees: experience with infantry tactics, sharpshooting, and
small arms skills.
Under Trump, hate groups became a “semi-official government contractor. For example at Trump rallies in Minneapolis and Dallas in 2019, Republicans were escorted to and from their car by Oath Keepers, a militia group whose members fancy themselves as “guardians of the republic.” Or as the Southern Poverty Law Center calls them, “one of the largest radical anti-government groups in the U.S. today.”
The Trace has
identified at least five occasions, spread across three states, where
gun-carrying anti-establishment protesters provided security,
demonstrated in support of, or worked for conservative local elected
officials or Republican Party functionaries.
The Three Percenters are
similar to the Oath Keepers though Three Percenters recruit more
civilians.
In late July 2017 a
legislative aide to Republican State Representative Mike Nearman
served four days in
jail after she lent a gun to a Three Percenter named Matthew
Heagy, who was prohibited from possessing firearms because of a
felony record. The aide, Angela Roman, is also a Three Percenter,
according to her attorney.
And the White House
response to impeachment inquiries? Here is Trump's retweet of
Robert Jeffress, Southern
Baptist (Evengelical) pastor on September 29, 2019 …
“...If the Democrats
are successful in removing the President from office (which they will
never be), it will cause a Civil War like fracture in this Nation
from which our Country will never heal.”
Before this tweet, the
Oath Keepers account tweeted that, under the U.S.
Constitution, “the militia (that’s us) can be called forth ‘to
execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel
Invasions.’ ... “All he has to do is call us up. We WILL answer
the call.” Other Oath Keeper tweets also hint at
violence: One states that “their favorite rifle is the AR 15.”
Heidi Beirich, Director of
Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Project, described the
current situation as a “turning point” for the militia movement.
She said …
“Trump’s words and
deeds have helped to cultivate an ethnic animus that has not in the
past been part of the anti-government movement’s ideology.”
At the time of the
American Revolutionary War, militias were groups of able-bodied men
who protected their towns, colonies, and eventually states. When the
Constitution was drafted, the militia was a state-based institution.
Consider the climate of the United States at the time. The country
had just fought a war, won its independence and was expanding west.
There were plenty of reasons to feel unsafe, and so "security"
had a very palpable meaning. The nations was in a survival mode.
The legal consensus is
that the Second Amendment applies to individual rights, within
reasonable regulations. Jesse Choper, a UC Berkeley Law professor
emeritus and the former Berkeley Law dean, says …
“The Second Amendment
gives you the right to bear arms. But really that’s the beginning
point of the conversation. As is true with most of the Bill of
Rights, the intent is not totally clear, and in fact, the language in
the Second Amendment is particularly confusing.”
To me, it is evident
change not only impacts the physical, but also ideas and
philosophical beliefs. The Constitution of the United States is over
240 years old. When the framers crafted this document the world and
the United States were different places altogether.
American activist Darryl
D. Perry (2019) says the system was built to protect tyranny. Perry
says …
“If we subscribe to
the fact that humans are vulnerable and subject to mistakes, logic
dictates that changes must be made.
“Our Founding Fathers
were no different. They made laws for the times because they did not
have a crystal ball to look into the future.
“And while their
intentions were admirable at the time, they had no forethought of the
creation of killing machines such as an AR-15, automatic firearms,
silencers and the like, nor the mental instability of individuals.
“Therefore, the
burden to carry out their true mission on keeping this nation safe
falls on our shoulders, whether we like it or not.”
And so, the Second
Amendment reads:
“A well regulated
militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of
the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”
That statement is as much
a burden as it is a
freedom. It does not grant untouchable rights to extremist
paramilitary groups or to those who use guns in force or anger to
maim and murder innocent citizens. The two adjectives that denote the
true weight of the amendment are “well regulated” and “security.”
To assume the gun lobby and modern militias are well
regulated and add to the security of the nation is to
ignore the present intentions of those organizations. And, to refuse
to insure that these adjectives are in check is to condone gun
violence, an epidemic in the United States of America.
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